by Ericmopar » Fri Aug 14, 2015 2:42 pm
In the case of Cajon Pass, Santa Fe and Southern Pacific originally owned the two mainlines. Santa Fe the lower two tracks and Southern Pacific the upper track (Colton Cutoff)
That being said Santa Fe shared shared their mainline with Southern Pacific using a contract called "Trackage Rights" in which S.P. shared in the maintenance costs of the right of way.
The trackage rights simply got transferred over with the line mergers into BNSF and U.P.
Also, U.P. originally had to swap trains in Barstow Ca with Santa Fe and S.P. That has changed with the U.P, S.P. merger in the 90s. Now Union Pacific's, Salt Lake subdivision has trackage rights straight through Barstow all the way to Los Angeles.
The rolling stock is swapped based on route miles traveled and also transportation fees across the different railroads. It's very complicated accounting.
It's over simplified, but one of the things related to locomotives, is simple swapping. IE if Norfolk Southern has 20 of BNSF's ES44s then BNSF might have 20 equivalent N.S locos in use on it's line, being expected to fuel and repair them.
They get turned into leases when the loco swapping is not balanced.
I've seen so many N.S. locos on the Transcon, going through Kingman Arizona, that I sometimes wonder what side of the country I'm on.
I also suspect a lot of tax dodging creative bookkeeping is at work there... The railroads are probably "leasing" to each other and using it as a write off, when if fact they are actually just swapping like engines and rolling stock.
Last edited by
Ericmopar on Fri Aug 14, 2015 4:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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